BOX OFFICE REPORT
November 21-23, 2014(estimates from BoxOfficeMojo.com)
TOP 51. THG: Mockingjay - Part I (56.2 million)2. Big Hero 6 ($50.0 million)3. Interstellar ($6.1 million)4. Dumb and Dumber To ($6.0 million)5. Gone Girl ($5.7 million)
Even the biggest appetites can be sated. Audiences just aren't as hungry for more Hunger Games as we all thought. Though Mockingjay, Part 1 delivered the biggest opening of 2014, with an estimated $123 million, that's still well below its predecessors. There might be a bit of franchise fatigue already. Not just for The Hunger Games series, but big franchises in general. Also, as we've seen all year long, even though movies continue to make outrageous sums of money, the overall desire to see a movie on the big screen, especially on its opening weekend, appears to be diminishing. I would be shocked if any other movies top Mockingjay's debut.
There's still no reason for Lionsgate to be too disappointed. After all, it's already made more than Interstellar, and will have topped Big Hero 6 before the week is out. Those two films are still holding on strong, but neither is likely to cross $200 million. Interest is just down across the board.
Dumb and Dumber To fell a stupidly high 61 percent, dropping all the way to fourth place. It will drop even more next week when Horrible Bosses 2 gives audiences seeking a gross-out comedy another (and possibly better) option. And then you've still got Gone Girl, which has remained in the Top 5 for eight crazy weeks. The last movie to manage that feat was Frozen.
Outside the top 5: - This Weekend's Indie Champ: Foxcatcher, the true-crime drama starring Steve Carell and Channing Tatum, remained on top, taking in $19,750 on each of its 24 screens.
- Kirk Cameron couldn't save Christmas or Saving Christmas. The preachy dramedy has made less than $2 million in its first 10 days.
- Beyond the Lights, the well-received music business drama, hasn't made a killing at the box office. But unlike a lot of the competition, it's actually turned a profit after only 10 days.
Next week: It's murderous employees versus trouble-making birds for the No. 2 spot. Horrible Bosses was a sizable comedy hit in 2011, taking in $117 million. The sequel should open around $25 million, which will put at No. 3. Penguins of Madagascar, based on the DreamWorks' Madagascar franchise is going to eat up all the family dollars, and should open around $45 million. Both of those will be below Mockingjay, Part 1's second weekend.